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Bill > HR2173


US HR2173

US HR2173
Advancing Offshore Wind Production Act


summary

Introduced
In Committee
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

112th Congress

Bill Summary

Advancing Offshore Wind Production Act - Exempts any project determined by the Secretary of the Interior to be an offshore meteorological site testing and monitoring project from environmental impact statement requirements under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA). Defines an "offshore meteorological site testing and monitoring project" as a project that is administered by the Department of the Interior and carried out on or in the waters of the Outer Continental Shelf to test or monitor weather (including wind, tidal, current, and solar energy) using towers, buoys, or other temporary ocean infrastructure and that: (1) causes less than one acre of surface or seafloor disruption at the location of each meteorological tower or other device and no more than five acres of surface or seafloor disruption within the proposed area affected by the project (including hazards to navigation), (2) is decommissioned within five years of its commencement, and (3) provides meteorological information to the Secretary of the Interior. Directs the Secretary to: (1) require that any applicant seeking to conduct an offshore meteorological site testing and monitoring project on the outer Continental Shelf obtain a permit and right of way for the project; (2) decide whether to issue such a permit and right of way within 30 days after receiving an application; (3) provide an opportunity for submission of comments by the public; (4) consult with the Secretary of Defense (DOD), the Commandant of the Coast Guard, and the heads of other federal, state, and local agencies that would be affected by issuance of the permit and right of way; and (5) provide an applicant the opportunity to remedy deficiencies in a permit application that was denied.

AI Summary

This bill, the Advancing Offshore Wind Production Act, aims to speed up the development of offshore wind energy by exempting certain preliminary projects from lengthy environmental review processes. Specifically, projects designed to test or monitor weather conditions like wind, tides, currents, and solar energy on the Outer Continental Shelf, which is the area of submerged land off the coast of the United States, will not require a full environmental impact statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA). These projects, defined as "offshore meteorological site testing and monitoring projects," must use temporary infrastructure like towers or buoys, cause minimal disruption to the seafloor (less than one acre per device and no more than five acres total), be removed within five years, and provide the collected weather data to the Secretary of the Interior. The Secretary will be required to issue permits for these projects within 30 days of receiving an application, after allowing for public comments and consulting with relevant agencies like the Department of Defense and the Coast Guard, and will give applicants a chance to fix any issues with their applications if denied.

Committee Categories

Agriculture and Natural Resources

Sponsors (11)

Last Action

Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 168. (on 10/14/2011)

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